More beautiful images of Jupiter are streaming in from NASA’s Juno spacecraft 390 million miles/628 million kilometers away.
Freshly arrived across NASA’s Deep Space Network after crossing 34 light-minutes and swiftly processed by a team of volunteer “citizen scientists,” the latest images show the Solar System’s biggest planet looking as fabulous as Juno raced from pole to pole in under three hours.
These images from its 35th perijove (close flyby) come just days before the 10th anniversary of the solar-powered probe’s launch on August 5, 2011 from Cape Canaveral, Florida.
More beautiful images of Jupiter are streaming in from NASA’s Juno spacecraft 390 million miles/628 million kilometers away.
Freshly arrived across NASA’s Deep Space Network after crossing 34 light-minutes and swiftly processed by a team of volunteer “citizen scientists,” the latest images show the Solar System’s biggest planet looking as fabulous as Juno raced from pole to pole in under three hours.
These images from its 35th perijove (close flyby) come just days before the 10th anniversary of the solar-powered probe’s launch on August 5, 2011 from Cape Canaveral, Florida.
More beautiful images of Jupiter are streaming in from NASA’s Juno spacecraft 390 million miles/628 million kilometers away.
Freshly arrived across NASA’s Deep Space Network after crossing 34 light-minutes and swiftly processed by a team of volunteer “citizen scientists,” the latest images show the Solar System’s biggest planet looking as fabulous as Juno raced from pole to pole in under three hours.
These images from its 35th perijove (close flyby) come just days before the 10th anniversary of the solar-powered probe’s launch on August 5, 2011 from Cape Canaveral, Florida.
More beautiful images of Jupiter are streaming in from NASA’s Juno spacecraft 390 million miles/628 million kilometers away.
Freshly arrived across NASA’s Deep Space Network after crossing 34 light-minutes and swiftly processed by a team of volunteer “citizen scientists,” the latest images show the Solar System’s biggest planet looking as fabulous as Juno raced from pole to pole in under three hours.
These images from its 35th perijove (close flyby) come just days before the 10th anniversary of the solar-powered probe’s launch on August 5, 2011 from Cape Canaveral, Florida.